NASA Launches Second Small Climate Satellite to Study Earthâs Poles
JUN 05, 2024
RELEASE 24-077
Rocket Labâs Electron rocket lifted off from Launch Complex 1 at MÄhia, New Zealand at 11:15 p.m. NZST June 5, 2024,
carrying a small satellite for NASAâs PREFIRE (Polar Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment) mission.
RocketLab
The second of NASAâs PREFIRE (Polar Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment) two satellites is communicating with ground controllers after launching at 3:15 p.m.
NZST, Wednesday (11:15 p.m. EDT, June 4). Data from these two shoebox-size cube satellites, or CubeSats, will better predict how Earthâs ice, seas, and weather will change in a warming world
â providing information to help humanity thrive on our changing planet.
The CubeSat launched on top Rocket Labâs Electron rocket from the companyâs Launch Complex 1 in MÄhia, New Zealand, and follows the May 25 launch of the first PREFIRE CubeSat. After a 30-day checkout period, when engineers and scientists
confirm both CubeSats are operating normally, the mission is expected to operate for 10 months.
âBy helping to clarify the role that Earthâs polar regions play in regulating our planetâs energy budget, the PREFIRE mission will ultimately help improve climate and ice models,â said Amanda Whitehurst, PREFIRE program executive, at NASA
Headquarters in Washington. âImproved models will benefit humanity by giving us a better idea of how our climate and weather patterns will change in the coming years.â
Capitalizing on NASAâs unique vantage point in space, PREFIRE will help understand the balance between incoming heat energy from the Sun and the outgoing heat given off at Earthâs poles. The Arctic and Antarctica act something like the
radiator in a carâs engine shedding much of the heat initially absorbed at the tropics back into space. The majority of that heat is emitted as far-infrared radiation. The water vapor content of the atmosphere, along with the
presence, structure, and composition of clouds, influences the amount of radiation that escapes into space from the poles.
The PREFIRE mission will give researchers information on where and when far-infrared energy radiates from the Arctic and Antarctic environments into space. The mission also will use its two CubeSats in asynchronous, near-polar orbits to
study how relatively short-lived phenomena like cloud formation, moisture changes, and ice sheet melt affect far-infrared emissions over time. The two satellites pass over the same part of Earth at different times of day, giving researchers information on
changing conditions.
âClimate change is reshaping our environment and atmosphere in ways that we need to prepare for,â said Brian Drouin, PREFIREâs deputy principal investigator at
NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
âThis mission will give us new measurements of the far-infrared wavelengths being emitted from Earthâs poles, which we can use to improve climate and weather models and help people around the world deal with the consequences of climate change.â
Each CubeSat carries an instrument called a thermal infrared spectrometer, which uses specially shaped mirrors and sensors to measure infrared wavelengths. Miniaturizing the instruments to fit on CubeSats required downsizing some parts
while scaling up other components.
âEquipped with advanced infrared sensors that are more sensitive than any similar instrument, the PREFIRE CubeSats will help us better understand Earthâs polar regions and improve our climate models,â said Laurie
Leshin, director at NASA JPL. âTheir observations will lead to more accurate predictions about sea level rise, weather patterns, and changes in snow and ice cover, which will help us navigate the challenges of a warming world.â
NASAâs Launch Services Program, based out of the agencyâs Kennedy Space Center in Florida, in partnership with NASAâs Earth System Science Pathfinder Program, is providing the launch service as part of the agencyâs Venture-class Acquisition
of Dedicated and Rideshare (VADR) launch services contract.
The PREFIRE mission was jointly developed by NASA and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. NASA JPL manages the mission for the agencyâs Science Mission Directorate and provided
the spectrometers. Blue Canyon Technologies built the CubeSats and the University of Wisconsin-Madison will process the data the instruments collect. The launch services provider is Rocket Lab USA Inc. of Long Beach, California.
To learn more about PREFIRE, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/prefire/
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